0%

10-letter words containing r, h

  • bridgehead — A bridgehead is a good position which an army has taken in the enemy's territory and from which it can advance or attack.
  • brigandish — a bandit, especially one of a band of robbers in mountain or forest regions.
  • brightener — a person or thing that brightens.
  • brightline — (of rules, standards, etc.) unambiguously clear: This muddies the waters of what should be a brightline rule.
  • brightness — the condition of being bright
  • brightsome — bright or luminous
  • brightwork — shiny metal trimmings or fittings on ships, cars, etc
  • bring home — introduce to parents
  • britishism — Briticism
  • brno chair — an armchair designed by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe in 1930, having a cantilevered frame of chromium-plated or stainless steel composed of two interlocking parts, one forming the legs and arms and the other the seat and back frame, with the back and seat lightly upholstered and usually covered with leather.
  • broadbrush — lacking full detail or information; incomplete or rough
  • broadcloth — fabric woven on a wide loom
  • broadsheet — A broadsheet is a newspaper that is printed on large sheets of paper. Broadsheets are generally considered to be more serious than other newspapers. Compare tabloid.
  • brockhouseBertram Neville, 1918–2003, Canadian physicist: Nobel Prize 1994.
  • brokership — an agent who buys or sells for a principal on a commission basis without having title to the property.
  • bronchiole — any of the smallest bronchial tubes, usually ending in alveoli
  • bronchitic — acute or chronic inflammation of the membrane lining of the bronchial tubes, caused by respiratory infection or exposure to bronchial irritants, as cigarette smoke.
  • bronchitis — Bronchitis is an illness like a very bad cough, in which your bronchial tubes become sore and infected.
  • brookhaven — a town in SW Mississippi.
  • brought on — made or bought outside the community, as a commercially manufactured product.
  • brought-on — made or bought outside the community, as a commercially manufactured product.
  • brownshirt — Nazi stormtrooper
  • brunnhilde — the heroine of Wagner's Ring of the Nibelungs. Compare Siegfried.
  • bruschetta — Bruschetta is a slice of toasted bread which is brushed with olive oil and usually covered with chopped tomatoes.
  • brush fire — a fire in brushwood
  • brush-fire — limited in scope, area, or importance, as some labor disputes or local skirmishes.
  • brushwheel — a toothless wheel with bristles attached to its circumference, used to turn another wheel by friction
  • bug-hunter — a person who is interested in insects
  • bull shark — a requiem shark, Carcharhinus leucas, inhabiting shallow waters from North Carolina to Brazil.
  • bum's rush — forcible ejection, as from a gathering
  • bunchberry — a dwarf variety of dogwood native to North America, Cornus canadensis, having red berries
  • bunchgrass — grass that grows in tufts
  • bundeswehr — the armed forces of Germany.
  • burchfieldCharles Ephraim, 1893–1967, U.S. painter.
  • burckhardt — Jacob Christoph. 1818–97, Swiss art and cultural historian; author of The Civilisation of the Renaissance in Italy (1860)
  • bursarship — a scholarship or grant awarded esp in Scottish and New Zealand schools, universities etc
  • burushaski — a language of NW Kashmir, not known to be related to any other language.
  • bush broom — an evergreen St.-John's-wort, Hypericum prolificum, common from New York to Iowa and southward, having yellow flowers in terminal clusters.
  • bush grass — a coarse reedlike grass, Calamagrostis epigejos, 1–11⁄2 metres (3–41⁄2 ft) high that grows on damp clay soils in Europe and temperate parts of Asia
  • bush shirt — bush jacket.
  • bushbeater — a person who conducts a thorough search to recruit talented people, as for an athletic team.
  • bushhammer — a hammer with small pyramids projecting from its working face, used for dressing stone
  • bushmaster — a large greyish-brown highly venomous snake, Lachesis muta, inhabiting wooded regions of tropical America: family Crotalidae (pit vipers)
  • bushranger — an escaped convict or robber living in the bush
  • bushwalker — a person who hikes through bushland
  • butlership — the skills of a butler
  • butterfish — an eel-like blennioid food fish, Pholis gunnellus, occurring in North Atlantic coastal regions: family Pholidae (gunnels). It has a slippery scaleless golden brown skin with a row of black spots along the base of the long dorsal fin
  • cacography — bad handwriting
  • cacotrophy — malnutrition
  • caecotroph — (biology) In certain mammals, especially rabbits and some rodents, a cake or pellet of food which is produced by means of digestion and expulsion through the anus.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?